After backing up slowly and following other orders, Rodriguez said the officer stopped, and told another officer to put his gun down.

That’s when they called her over to explain what was happening.

“He tells me, ‘Oh, it was a misunderstanding, you see,’ and he`s trying to tell me… it kind felt like he chuckled about it,” Rodriguez explained.

But she said she didn’t find the situation funny.

In the police report Rodriguez said she later got from Murray Police, the officer states in the synopsis of the report that, "This is a felony stop of a suspected stolen vehicle."

In felony traffic stops, officers draw their guns.

The report goes on to state, “It was determined during the stop that the plate had been misread. The felony stop was terminated and the situation was explained to the driver.”

Later on the officer states the reason for the mistake.

“I explained to Crystal that when I had run her plate I mistook the ‘W’ for a ‘N.’ I then explained that the plate *****N came back to a stolen vehicle, which was the reason for the type of traffic stop that was performed. I apologized for the misunderstanding. I gathered her information, and again apologized for the misunderstanding.”

Rodriguez said officers didn’t thoroughly explain the situation to her or offer enough of a reason or apology for what happened.

“He was like, ‘Okay well that`s all, that’s it, and then he’s like, ‘I’m sorry.’ And he left,” she said.

She said she plans to file a complaint over how the ordeal was handled.

“I just know that I was really traumatized,” Rodriguez said.

Fox 13 reached out to Murray Police Monday afternoon. A representative said they weren’t able to get information by the end of the business day on Monday, but that they did plan to have more information and the report to release on Tuesday.